The rail carries a faithful Trustpilot lockup — the green star, “Reviews 14,620 · Excellent,” 4.9, and a “✓ Verified Company” chip — sitting above the buy button. It isn’t an embed, it’s a drawing. The reader is never asked to trust the brand, only to recognize a logo they already trust, and recognition is faster than judgment. Load the same URL twice and the entire page swaps: the identical oil also sells as “Orelvique™” under a first-person weight-loss story and a different invented byline.
What to steal
The underlying move is real and worth taking: if your reviews live on a platform your buyer already trusts, put that platform’s own widget next to the offer and let the trust transfer — that’s exactly what a Judge.me or Trustpilot embed is for. What can’t be borrowed is the badge without the account behind it. A redrawn mark with invented counts and a self-issued “verified” chip is trademark misuse stacked on fabricated proof. If the numbers are real the embed is free; if they aren’t, no drawing fixes that.
As captured Jul 2026 · the live page may have changed or been removed — vitalskindaily.com ↗
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